THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fall or Winter Suit from the the city. Dress Suits a specialty H. Wild Co. Tailors and Importers 311 South State Street cra~p Books higan Scrap Book is the best on the Market for the money. r our books before you purchase. We also have extra leaves i have it filled. If you have not had a scrap book before start get one at pan & Co. STUDENT DOORSTOR'E oing Things rs are as a rule well I am the suocessful cessful men and fora at to be successful. erye Liberty Street T S Yf B SAY IT AGAIN! THE fUCmIIGAN DAILY Official newspaper at the University of Mich- igan. Published every morning except Monday dur- ing the university year. Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, under Act of Congress of March , 1879. Offices: Second floor, Ann Arbor Press Build- ing, Maynard Street. Office Hours: Editor-r to p. m.; 7 to O0 p. mn. Business Manager-: to 3 p. in. Subscription Price: By carrier, $.so; by mail, $300. Want Ad Stations: Press Building; Quarry's Pharmacy; University Pharmacy; Davis and Konald's Confectionary Store. Phones Bell and Home, 960. Frank Pennell .......... Managing Editor Joseph Fouchard.........Business Manager Maurice Toulme ..............News Editor C. Harold Hippler ..............Assistant Karl Matthews .............Athletic Editor G. C. Eldredge...........Assistant Jeohn Townley.....;.....Music and Drama Qaude Edwards ...............Women Harold B. Abbott.............Cartoonist EDITORIALS Harold G. McGee Louis R. Haler Howell Van Auken Maurice Myers R. Emmett Taylor.......Edwin R. Thurston NIGHT EDITORS H. Beach Carpenter .. Fred B. Foulk Morton R. Hunter......... Morris Milligan Bruce J. Miles............Ernest R. Burton Lester F. Rosenbaum.....David D. Hunting REPORTERS James D'evlin................ V. Sweeney Leonard M. Rieser-........-Harold P. Scott Leo Burntt . ,. .... .......Fenn . Hossick F. M. Church.. .... CarltonJenks Charles S. Johnson.........C...HC.IH. Lang Bernus' E. Kline ......... .... R. Iistner Will Shafroth..............Henry C. Bogle F. F. McKinney............. G S. Johnston 4V. R. Melton..........alph E. Cunningham Y. F. Jabin HsuH.............H . Rummel BUSINESS STAFF A. R. Johnson, Jr..........Advertising Mgr' Emerson Smith .................Accountant Laurence D. Bartlett.:......Circulation Mgr. Sherwood Field...........John Leonard Harry' . Johnson THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1912... Night Editor-Lester F. Rosenbaum. Meeting of Business Staff this af- ternoon at 5:00 o'clock. All members Iand tryouts report. DR. SMALL OBJECTS. Dr. A. W. Small, Conference rep- resentative of the University of Chi- cago and generally considered as the faculty man there who is closest to athletics, has come out strongly against the activits of the western dailies in behalf of Michigan's return to the Conference. In Wednesday's is- sue of the Chicago Tribune, Dr. Small makes the following statements: "These college paper editors know nothing at all about the real situation. They are merely raising dust that will probably hinder Michigan's re- turn and their efforts should cease at once. These editors are clamoring without reason and without effect, un- less it be a deleterious effect." These alarming and startling state- ments, coming from a Conference man who has for seven years quibbled over minor matters, rather lends a bit of humor to the controversy. But clear- ly asida from the humorous end of it, the statements mark an epoch, show that the cries of the alumni and the student bodies of great western uni- versities are displeasing to such Con- ference heads. It shows that such Conference heads who have talked and talked for seven years do not like the idea of publishing the facts. And above all it points out that the cam- paign of the dailies is bearing fruit. Why does Dr. Small want the pub- licity ceased? Why should not the thousands upon thousands of alumni and students know the facts? Why should not those who are most inter- ested have a voice in the matter? The editors who met at Chicago last week do know the facts. They do know the conditions as they exist in Michigan and in every Conference school, know it well, through the eyes of the teams, coaches, students, and alumni. They know full well the absurdity of the secret atmosphere that surrounds the Conference board. They know that the questions are not the complex and perplexing ones that these Confer- ence heads would have the laymen be- lieve. They know that faculty con- trol is not the only question and they know that the training table is the real issue. In the spirit of friendly rivalry, of common interests, these ed- itors opened the facts, tore off the lid, and intend to give to the students and alumni the real meat. Why does Dr. Small want the facts suppressed? Is the united voice of the alumni and students displeasing to Dr. Small? Does the desire of the students of Chicago, Illinois, and the other schools to have Michigan return interfere with the plans of Dr. Small? Or does the pleading of the student interrupt the deep thought that he is spending on the matter. In his statement Dr. Small takes great care to say that the campaign is without effect. Can Dr. Small explain why it is without effect? Does he openly admit that the Confer- ence heads pay absolutely no atten- tion to the united desire of their stu- dents and graduates? Does he place above the opinions of thousands, who are learning the facts, the opinion of nine men who have hidden the facts? If the campaign has had the effect to disturb Dr. Small why does he prac- tically say he will pay no attention to it? This in itself is but an incident common to the Conference. It is an acknowledgment that twenty-five thousand students and hundreds of thousands of alumni are absolutely ignored. Dr. Small is to be commend- ed for his frankness. He also states that the editors are clamoring without reasoning. But it is evident that Dr. Small overlooks the fact that the views expressed by the editors are not their sole property but the views of practically all the students and alumni. What an enor- mous number of unreasonable people the western universities have produc- ed. These students and alumni are learning the facts through publicity and are reasoning, and it is evident that they don't need seven years to come to a conclusion. We may bow be- fore the superior reasoning powers of Dr. Small and like associates but if we do bow we ask for progress. Rea- son is scarce if it takes seven years to mature. Dr. Small asserts that this cam- paign should cease at once. Why does Dr. Small want the matter to hang fire? Why does he want the facts suppressed? We believe the students and alumni should know the facts. We believe they should know all the facts. And we cannot be restrained by what the Conference heads choose to dole out. Michigan does not act in the dark. It wants the light of pub- licity to show up the real issues and disclose the real conditions. And we believe that the students in five other western universities want to know the facts. King Canute once tried to stop the tides, Dr. Small is about to present a similar skit. But the tide of student opinion and alumni opinion is going to have effect and the facts are going to be known despite the ap- peal to darkness. We admire Dr. Small for making clear his attitude. We thank him for his admission that students and alum- ni do not count in the least. We grant (Continued on page 3.) 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